It is always a pleasure to visit
Malmaison, where the principal actors on the stage of the First
Empire, Napoleon and Josephine, seem to haunt the rooms, which
have been restored to their original State.However, to celebrate
the bicentenary of the coronation of Napoleon as emperor at Notre
Dame in 1804, Claudette Joannis has added to the chateau's charms
with an exhibition of jewellery and personal souvenirs associated
with him and many other personalities from the First and Second
Empires.
A collector and authority on French regional
jewellery, Mme Joannis has concentrated on displaying pieces chosen
not so much for their intrinsic worth but for their personal and
sentimental significance. Instead of diamonds, demonstrating imperial
glory and grandeur, she shows jet, cut steel, coral and the hair
of beloved individuals, living and dead. Thus she evokes the tragedy
of General Charles de la Bedoyere (1786-1815), sentenced to death
by Louis XVIII for welcoming Napoleon to Grenoble on his escape
from Elba, and thereby turning the tide in his favour. The La
Bedoyere group includes miniatures of Charles and his wife, Georgine,
as well as items he wore on 19 August, 1815 as he faced the firing
squad: a watch, a cravat pin containing a lock of Georgine's hair
inscribed with the date of their marriage, 13 November 1813, and
a ring, inscribed VALEUR FIDELITE, enclosing some hair of their
son. Afterwards, Georgine placed hair cut from his head in a silver
locket inscribed PLUS DE BONHEUR QU'AVEC LUI: this she wore every
day until her own death, in 1871. As the family was staunchly
Bonapartist, in the next generation the Comtesse de La Bedoyere
was one of the thirteen ladies in waiting appointed by the Empress
Eugenie, who gave her a very fine watch and chatelaine bearing
the crowned imperial cipher.
|